American Music Awards: Iggy Azalea Leads Nominations

“Boom Clap” singer Charli XCX announced as the Nov. 23 event’s first performer

The American Music Awards are about to get fancy.

Iggy Azalea, the 24-year-old Australian hip-hop artist behind radio hit “Fancy,” leads the pack with six nominations at the annual fan-voted awards show, it was announced Monday.

John Legend, newly-announced Super Bowl performer Katy Perry and current coach of The Voice, Pharrell Williams,followed with five nominations each, while Lorde received four.Beyonce, Eminem, Imagine Dragons, One Republic and One Direction each scored three. Other artists receiving multiple nominations are Bastille, Drake, Luke Bryan and Sam Smith.

In a category tweak, the American Music Awards’ top award, Artist of the Year, has expanded from five to 10 nominees. The 10 nominees will be narrowed down to five based on votes received through Nov. 13, with the winner determined via the total number of votes received during the full voting period. Artists vying for the top prize include Azalea, Beyonce, Bryan, Eminem, Imagine Dragons, Legend, Lorde, One Direction, Perry and Williams.

The Single of the Year category has also expanded from three to five nominees, with Azalea and CharliXCX‘s “Fancy,” Legend’s “All of Me,” Magic!’s “Rude,” Perry and Juicy J’s “Dark Horse” and Williams’ Oscar-nominated “Happy” facing off.

Competing in Top Soundtrack are three strong contenders: Frozen, The Fault in Our Stars and Guardians of the Galaxy.

The American Music Awards will be broadcast live from L.A. Live’s Nokia Theatre on Sunday, Nov. 23 from 8-11 p.m. ET/PT on ABC. Charli XCX, also behind The Fault in Our Stars‘ “Boom Clap,” has been tapped as the show’s first performer.

Voting begins Monday in all categories except New Artist of the Year on AMAvote.com and via Twitter by tweeting the nominee’s name, category and #AMAs hashtag. Voting for the New Artist of the Year opens Nov. 1 and closes in the first hour of the Nov. 23 live telecast.

The American Music Awards are produced by Dick Clark Productions. Allen Shapiro and Mike Mahan are executive producers. Larry Klein, Barry Adelman and Mark Bracco are producers.